The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, January 25, 1906, Image 5

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    S UPER VIS OR SESSIONS
Official : Publication : of : Proceeding
in p» iMa—naa—B—
O’Neill, Neb , Jan. 11, 1906.—Board
called to order at 9 o’clock a. m., pre
sent: Biglin, Clark, Kramer, Keys,
Root, Skidmore and Phillips. Min
utes of yesterdays session read and
approved.
On motion the bond of R. E. Chit
tick was approved.
On motion the road overseer of dis
trict No. 7 was instructed to open the
road running east and west through
xil section 32-34-14.
’ Committee to estimate expenses for
the coming year presented the follow
ing report:
Court house, jail and prisoners.* 5,000
Books stationary and printing. 1,500
Assessors. 4,000
County officers. 8,000
Conorers Inquest and witness
fees. 500
Fuel and lights. 890
Insane . 800
Costs in Justice court. 500
Roads. 2,000
Elections. 1.200
Court and jurors. 8,000
Miscellaneous. 1,500
Bridges. 12,000
Soldiers relief. 1.000
Total. *46,800
Signed: J. C. Clark,
* Rodell Root,
C. D. Keyes,
• Committee.
On motion the above report was
adopted.
On motion Supervisors Root, Kra
mer and Clark were appointed a com
mittee to confer with county officials
in regard to their need of help for the
coming year.
On motion the board adjourned
until one o’clock p. m.
One o’clock p. m., board called to
order, all members present.
Committee on help for county
officers reported as follows:
We recomend that the treasurer,
clerk of the court and county clerk be
allowed one deputy each at a salary of
$700 per year and clerks in number
sufficient to do the work at $650 each.
The county superintendent salary to
be fixed at $1200 per year and one de
puty during such time as is necessary
at a salary of $40 per month.
Signed: Rodell Root,
Conard Kranjer,
O. F. Biglin,
On motion the report was adopted.
Resolution was read and adopted to
instruct the clerk to advertise for bids
to construct a storage vault over the
vault now used by the treasurer.
On motion the board adjourned un
til nine o’clock tomorrow morning.
F. W. Philips, Chairman.
W. P. Si mar, Clerk,
w' By E. S. Gilmour, Deputy.
O’Neill, Neb., Jan. 12, 1906.—Board
called to order at nine o’clock a. m.,
all members present, minutes of yes
terdays session were read and ap
proved.
On motion the depository bonds of
the varivous banks were rejected.
On motion the board adjourned un
til one o’clock p. m.
One o’clock p. m., board called to
order, all members present.
The following names were selected
from which to draw the jury for the
March term of court:
•
——
Yeast
Foam
is the
Strong
Sweet
Yeast
that makes the
Strong
Sweet
Bread
that makes a i
Strong
Sweet
Tempered
People
Yeast Foam is the yeast that
took the First Grand Prize at
the St. Louis Exposition, and
is sold by all grocers at 5c
a package—enough for 40
loaves. Send a postal card
for our new illustrated book,
“ Good Bread: How to Make
It.”
NORTHWESTERN YEAST CO. j
* CHICAGO, ILL.
HE above picture of the
man and fish is the trade
mark of Scott’s Emulsion,
and is the synonym for
strength and purity. It is sold
in almost all the civilized coun
tries of the globe.
If the cod fish became extinct
it would be a world-wide calam
ity, because the oil that comes
from its liver surpasses all other
fats in nourishing and life-giving
properties. Thirty years ago
the proprietors of Scott's Emul
sion found a way of preparing
cod liver oil so that everyone can
take it and get the full value of
the oil without the objectionable
taste. Scott’s Emulsion is the
best thing in the world for weak,
backward children, thin, delicate
people, and all conditions of
wasting and lost strength.
Send for free sample.
SCOTT & BOWNE, CHEMISTS
409-416 PBAHL ST BEET, NEW TOHK
50c. and $1.00. All druggists.
Atkinson: Nels Anderson, C. W.
Frickson, Wm. Griffin, Frank G.
Reckner, Robt Bitney.
Chambers: A. B Miller, C. E.
Farrier, E. R. Bell.
Conley: G. A. Davis.
Cleveland: James Dennis.
Deloit: B. F. Mitchell, Geo A. Buf
fington .
Dustin, A1 Robertson.
Emmet: T. B. Maring.
Ewing: Harvey Porter, Goe Mitchell,
A. B. Donaldson, Neil Provost.
Fairview: Oliver Granes.
Francis: W. G. Ogle.
Gratten: Wm Myers, Henry Hoxie,
Tim Hanley.
Green Valley: Frank Nehr.
Inman: R. J. Clark, W. F. Rich
ards, C. A. Auten.
Iowa: D. B. Styer.
Lake: F. B. Coleman.
MeClure: J. M. Jackman.
Paddock: Eric Roe, Geo Speltz.
Pleasant View: Ed Mullen.
Rock Falls: Charles Bigler.
Sand Creek: Fred Blondin.
Saratoga: Ole Nelson.
Scott: B. C. Murnan.
Shamrock: M. L. Wintermote.
Sheridan: M. Thornton.
Sheilds: Wm Menish, Frank Hatch.
Steel Creek: E. E. Cole, C. L. Mc
Elhaney.
Swan: S. S. Smith.
Stuart: Jeseph Bernt, Oharles Big
low, Joseph Kaplan, Fred Mulford, R.
Oppenheimer.
Verdigres: W. H. Vanconet, C. B.
Sharp, M. O. Howard.
Willowdale: Frank Hunter.
Wyoming: C. W. Moss.
O’Neill, 1st ward: B. F. Sanders,
Micheal Gallegher.
O’Neill, 2d ward: P. J. McManus>
Mike Sheenan.
O’Neill, 3d ward: Bennett Martin,
John Coffey.
Supervisor Clark presented a min
ority report in regard to the removal
of the Badger bridge.
A motion was made and seconded
that the majority report of the com
mittee be adopted.
On the above motion the yeas and
nayes were called with the following
result:
Yeas: Keyes, Skidmore, Root and
Phillips, (4).
Nays: Biglin, Clark and Kramer, (3).
The motion to adopt the majority
report was carried.
On motion the claim of D. J. Cronin
for expense account was allowed
amount $036 51 and the clerk was in
structed to draw a warrant for the
amount.
On motion the rules governing the
board for the year 1905 were adopted
as the rules to govern this board for
the year 1900.
Resolution was adopted that the
printing committee be instructed to
secure from the several county offices
an estimate of all supplies needed in
their offices during the present year
and submit the same to this board
inside of one week.
On motion the board adjourned un
til nine o’clock tomorrow morning.
F. W. Phillips, Chairman.
W. P. Simar, Clerk.
Jan. 13, 15,10,17 and 18 were oc
cupied by the board in settlement.
The Grip.
“Before we can sympathize with
others, we must have suffered our
selvss. ’’ No one can realize the suffer
ing attendant upon an attack of the
grip, unless ho has had the actual ex
perience. There is probably no dis
ease that causes so much physical or
mental agony, or which so successfully
defies medical aid. All danger from
the grip, however, may be avoided by
the prompt use of Chamberlain’s
Cough Remedy. Among the tens oi
thousands who have used this remedy,
not one case has ever been reported
that has resulted in pneumonia or
that has not recovered. For sale by
P. C. Corrigan.
ATKINSON
II. M. Banks and family left Mon
day morning for an extended visit
friends in Missouri and Michigan.
It is reported that Frank Ellis of
Catalpa, is seriously ill and is under
the care of Drs. Cross and Batty of
Butte, who are treating him for blood
poison.
H. A. Allen and J. M. Bennett left
for Texas Tuesday morning. They,
took advantage of the excursion rate
offered by the Rock Island road and
will visit several points of interest be
fore returning.—The Graphic.
Stomach Troubles and Constipation.
“Chamberlain’s Stomach and Liver
Tablets are the best thing for stomach
troubles and constipation I have ever
sold,” says J. R. Cullman, a druggist
of Potterville, Mich. They are easy
to take and always give satisfaction.
I tell my customers to try them and
if not satisfactory to come back and
get their money, but have never had
a complaint ” For sale by P. C. Cor
rigan. _
EWING
The stage is being finished and the
scenery hung in the new opera house
this week.
Mrs. J. C. Mastic came up from
Arlington Saturday.night and is visit
ing with Mrs. R. L. Huston this week.
At the communion held in the
United Presbyterian church last Sab
bath, ten were received into member
ship.
Leonard Herron returned to Ames,
(Iowa) Agricultural College yester
day, after spending a few weeks with
his parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Her
ron.—The Advocate.
Danger of a Cold and How to Avoid
Them.
More fatalities have their origin in
or result from a cold than from any
other cause. This fact alone should
make people more careful as there is
ne danger whatever from a cold when
it is properly treated in the beginning.
For many years Chamberlain’s Cough
Remedy has been recognized as the
most prompt and effectual medicine
in use for this disease. It acts on na
ture’s plan, loosens the cough, relieves
the lungs, opens the secretions and
aids nature in restoring the system to
a healthy condition. Sold by P. C.
Corrigan. _
STUART
N. F. Crowell is now cashier of the
National bank and was installed one
of the directors the first of the year.
Fred Barclay has sold a farm to J.
J. Gill of Emmettsburg, Iowa, who
will move his family out here the first
of March.
There has been a change of officers
in the management of the First Nat
ional bank of Stuart. John Laird,
one of our substantial stockmen, is
now the president and L. M. Weaver
vice-president.
John Inglis, an old-time resident of
Holt county, but now a resident of
Jasper county, Iowa, who has been
here several weeks visiting with his
children and old acauaintances, re
ceived word last week that he was
one of the heirs to an estate of a re
lative who died recently in the east.
He left here Wednesday, returning by
the way of Cozad, Nebraska, for a
short stay with his son Ed Inglis.—
The Ledger.
An agreeable movement of the
bowels without any unpleasant effect
is produced by Chamberlain’s Stomach
and Liver Tablets. Fon sale by P. C.
Corrigan.
f
A Grim Tragedy
is daily enact ed, in thousandsof homes,
as Death cl.dms, in each one, another
victim of Consumption or Pneumonia,
iiut when Coughs and Colds are prop
erly treated, the tragedy is averted.
F. G. Huntley, of Oaklandon, Ind.,
writes: “My wife had the consump
tion, and three doctors gave her up.
Finally she took I)r. King’s New Dis
covery for Consumption, Coughs and
Colds, which cured her, and to-day
she is well and strong.” It kills the
germs of all diseases. One dose re
lieves. Guaranteed at 50c and $1.00
by P. C. Corrigan druggist. Trial
bottle free._
CHAMBERS.
C. H. Grimes left for Lincoln Mon
day morning to attend the stock show.
Miss Mary Alderson is home from
her school because of scarlet fever in
the district in the northern part of the
county.
M. L. Winterraote started Monday
morning for Omaha to undergo an
operation for appendicites at the
hospital.
Last Friday, the old soldiers spent
the day with Mr. L. G. Lambert, it
being his birthday. A very enjoyable
time was had and all departed wish
ing him many happy returns of the
day.—The Bugle.
Sickening Shivering Fits
of Ague and Malaria, can be relieved
and cured with Electric Bitters. This
is a pure, tonic medicine; of especial
benefit in malaria, on the disease,
driving it entirely out of the system.
It is much to be preferred to Quinine,
having none of this drug’s bad after
effects. E. S. Munday, of Henrietta,
Tex., writes: “My brother was very
low with malarial fever and jaundice,
till he took Electric Bitter, which
saved his life. At P. C. Corrigan’s
drug store; price 50c, guaranteed.
Enarliah Cookery.
French cookery came from Italy, but
long before France attained any dis
tinction English cooking was spoken of
as the best In Europe. After the reign
of Henry VIII. soups and fish fell into
general disuse, and larger quantities of
meat occupied their place. "In the
reign of James II. cookery had fallen
to Its lowest depth. It revived a little
In the reigns of Anne and George I.,
degenerated again In the reigns of
George II. and III., until at last Eng
lish cooking was little better than that
of the ancient Britons.”—London Tele
graph.
Very Low Rates to Lincoln, Neb.,
Via the North-Western Line. Ex
cursion tickets will be sold Jan. 13 to
18, inclusive, limited to return until
Jan. 22, inclusive, on account of Vari
ous Agricultural, and Stock Breeders’
meetings Epply to agents Chicago
& North-Western R’y.
What a “Hnirlcaae” la,
"Hurricane” Is the old Spanish name
for a West Indies cyclone, but It Is
used by modern meteorologists to des
ignate a long continued wind of ex
treme violence. In Beaumont’s scale
the different winds are classed as
"light,” “gentle," “fresh” and "strong”
breezes. The next Is a “stiff” breeze,
then a “strong” wind and then we
strike the “gales.” The “gales” nil
through three or four classes, the last
merging Into the "hurricane.”
Spoiled Her Beauty.
Harriet Howard, of 200 W. 34th St.,
New York, at one time had her beau
ty spoiled with skin trouble. She
writes: “I had Salt Rheum or Eczema
for years, but nothing would cure it,
until I used Bucklen’s Arnica Salve.”
A quick and sure healer for cuts, burns
and sores. 25c at P. C. Corrigan’s
drug store.
The Cellars of Bordeaux.
The cobwebs will seem to an Impres
sionable visitor the noblest things In
the Bordeaux cellars. Some of them
look like thick pile curtains, somber in
hue, of course, but famously suggestive
of warmth. And with even only a
moderate imagination one may go to
and fro among the barrels fancying the
pendent shapes overhead are dusky
stalactites Instead of the airy next to
nothing as they really are. If you hold
your candle high enough you may
shrivel a few yards of the fabric. But
that were truly a shocking deed of
vandalism, for, though no layman can
understand why this dismal tapestry
is reverenced as it is, bis Ignorance will
not be held sufficient excuse for his
crime.—Chambers’ Journal.
Very Low Rates to Beatrice, Neb.,
Via the North-Western Line. Ex
cursion tickets will be sold Jan. 15 and
16, limited to return until Jan. 19, in
clusive, on account State Volunteer
Firemen’s Association. Apply to
agents Chicago & North-Western R’y.
The Salta In the Ocean.
The salts of the sea have fed through
out all time countless living things
which have thronged its water and
whose remains now form the rocks of
continents or lie spread in beds of un
known thickness over 66,000,000 square
miles of the 143,000,000 square miles of
the ocean’s floor. They have lent the
substance to build the fringing reefs
of the land and all the coral islands of
the sea, and there are at present on
the basis of an average salinity of 3Vi
per cent in the 290,700,000 cubic miles
of water which make up the ocean’s
90,000,000,000,000,000 tons, or 10,173,
000 cubic miles, of salt. This is suffi
cient to cover the areas of all the
lands of the earth with a uniform layer
of salt to a depth of 1,000 feet.
The Kind You Have Always Bought, and which has been
in use for over 30 years, has borne the signature of
- and has been made under his per
^7*sonal supervision since its infancy*
*'CCCCA/A£ Allow no one to deceive you in this* |
All Counterfeits, Imitations and “Just-as-good” are bufc
Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health of
Infants and Children—Experience against Experiment*
What is CASTORIA
\
Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Pare* >,
gorlc, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is Pleasant. It ^
contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotie
substance. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys Worms »
and allays Feverishness. It cures Diarrhoea and Wind
Colic. It relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation
and Flatulency. It assimilates the Food, regulates the ji
Stomach and Bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep*
The Children's Panacea—The Mother's Friend.
GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS \
I
1
J
* •?
}
The Kind You Have Always Bought •
In Use For Over 30 Years.
▼HI eiNTAUH OOMMNV, TP MURRAY STREET, NEW TORN CITY.
SYMPATHETIC LISTENERS
The Help They May Afford to Slow
and Indifferent Talkers.
At no time more than when a thought
la struggling toward expression should
a friend bear with a friend’s infirmi
ties. A deep sympathy should be pour
ed out with lavish affection about the
one who is seriously striving to say
some real thing. In this atmosphere of
patient, sympathetic Intelligence the
inept word, the crude phrase, the whol
ly inadequate expression will be en
abled to do their work, and the thought
transference will be effected; the
thought will be safely lodged In the
mind of the other, slightly bruised in
transit, but intact and intelligible.
With an "I know what you mean,”
“Exactly,” or “Go on; I understand,"
much help may be rendered, and at
last when the thinker of the thought
has placed his friend in possession nnd
by reason of this effort has entered In
to fuller possession of it himself, the
conversation Is in a way to begin.
Then lavish upon the elaboration of the
thought all the beauties that can be
woven out of words — precision, bal
ance, music—but let us, dear lovers of
language, rememb'er to be discreetly
gentle and listen with averted glance
while the thought is still in negligee^—
Atlantic.
Greatly in Demand.
Nothing is more in demand than a
medicine which meets modern require
ments for a blood and system cleanser,
such as Dr. King’s New Life Pills.
They are just what you need to cure
stomach and liver troubles. Try them.
At P. C. Corrigan’s drug store, 25c.,
guaranteed.
"The Bridge” Born of Sorrow.
"My poem entitled ‘The Bridge,' ”
said Longfellow, ‘‘was written In sor
row, which made me feel for the loneli
ness of others. I was a widower at the
time, and I used sometimes to go over
the bridge to Boston evenings to meet
friends and return near midnight by
the same way. The way was silent,
save here and there a belated footstep.
The sea rose or fell among the wooden
piers, and there was a great furnace on
the Brighton hills whose red light was
reflected by the waves. It was on such
a late, solitary walk that the spirit of
the poem came upon me. The bridge
has been greatly altered, but the place
of It 1s the same.”
Very Low Rates to Denver, Colo.,
Via the North-Western Line. Ex
cursion tickets will be sold on Jan. 28,
29 and 30, limited to return until Feb.
15th, inclusive, on account of Wool
Growers and Live Stock Association
Meetings. Apply to agents Chicago
& North-Western R'y.
A Jamaican Lady Speaks Highly of
Chambei Iain’s Congh Medicine.
Mrs. Michael Hart, wife of the sup
erintendent of Cart Service at Kings
town, Jamaica, West Indies Islands,
says that she has for some years, used
Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy for
coughs, croup and whooping cough
and has found it very beneficial. She
has implicit confidence in it and .would
not be without a bottle oi it in her
home. Sold by P. C. Corrigan.
For Infants an<t; Children.
The Kind You Have Always Bought
Bears the
Signature of
WINDS AND DRAFTS.
The Former Are Beneficial, but the
batter Are Danveroua.
By a draft Is meant the currents of
air In an Inclosed space. Our fore
fathers attributed nearly all the evils
that beset them to drafts, and they
would not have slept in uncurtained
beds for anything. Of course their
windows and doors were shaky, and
houses stood far apart, so drafts were
nearly inevitable. But the modem sci
entific world tries to deny drafts alto
gether and calls them winds, which are
harmless and even healthy to a certain
degree.
Any one who cares to find out the
difference between a wind and a draft
cun do so in any apartment which has
windows on different sides of the
house. Let him open a window on a
windy day on the side of the house
toward which the wind blows. The air
which comes in is quite harmless if
the person exposed to it be dressed in
warm clothes, and little children may
take the air in a room thus ventilated.
But let him open a window past which
the wind blows, and it will be found
that the air in the room is moved by a
number of currents, all of which strive
to reach the opening. It is the passing
wind which sucks up the air in the
room and draws it out, and this causes
the room to have what is called a
draft.
The effect upon sensitive persons is
immediately felt, like the forerunner
of pain to come. A draft will always
be felt as colder than the wind. Very
dangerous drafts are those that are
produced in railway cars by the rapid
motion of the train. It is not wind
that gets into the carriages, but the
air of the car which is sucked out A
lighted match held to the chink of the
window will prove this, as the flame
will be drawn toward the window, not
blown from it
1906 World Almanac and
Encyclopedia
/»
tls Or Sale AU Over the United States .
- 1 • ■'Ui_Li_l
It is a volume of nearly 700 p^ges,
and sells for 25c. Sent by mail for 35c.
A reference book of unusual value,
almost indespensable to any man or
business, or in the profession^. .• It
contains more than 1,000 timely topics
and presents over 10,000 facts such as
arise daily for answering. Election
statistics, agricultural, financial, ed
ucational, railroads, shipping,. etc.,
through all the list of topics where
new figures are most valuable. 34 col
umns of index. Send for this Standard
American Annual. Address—
THE WOULD
Pulitzer Building New York City
T '